Depots to ?& ti)t ^myrowtnnti vf % State axCb Country.
JOHN C. BAILEY, PRO'R. 11 fi111 V11HU GREENVILLE, SOUTH CAROLINA, JANUARY 21 1872- VOLUME XVHWI0. *.
I ?rr5*p%=iy!^~!3aB^!w^r^iBggM"TT'yinr^^PPffF^iTg^4M*^j
BAMEI6
DRT 600D8, BOO1
G. W. BRUT
RE now receiving and openir
ILY GROCERIES, consist!
Crushed. Powdered nil
Java, Lagnyra and Rio
Gnnpowaer, Imperial n
MOLASSES and SYRI
Family FLOUR, in bai
MACKEREL, Canned
English MUSTARD, M
Yeast POWDERS, SO
PEPPER, GINGER, (
PICKLES, SAUCES,,
al
French aid American
NUTS of various kind
SEGARS, PIPES, Sin<
Table and Packet Kniv
Writing Paper, Envelo
A VARIED
Hardware, ci
GLASS'
WITH A GENERAL
t imrnt a n*f\ nifmi m
mm ]
TRIM A1I1
SESJ
Many other Articles for tlio us*
FARM, too numerous to mention i
PLEASE CALL AND E:
?. w. s&v
Nov 1 [v ;
^
WILLIAM SLOAN K,
Lthogmphic. Copper-plato?
AND OENBRaL
JOB FBI VT ER,
iKLAIH'OTaTOT,
COI.UMWA, S. C.
Books, i* pMca. p- !??, '
C'>r'Ii*. Oiri-uUr*, ft II !! iul?', F.i?* Sin.- I
il?*8, Maps, I'liiiiB Clinlk mill Line Diaw-|
ings, I/qnor Lb?l?. I>r> ujg ??' ?* Pr?aerip? '
tions, etc, rxi-i'ii'M ? i'li
N RAINESS AND DK-P iTCII,
AND < N TUB
' Most Reasonable 2erni8.
Oci 25 2a Jin,"
PACIFIC GUANO COMPANYS
COMPOUND
ACID PHOSPHATE OF LIME,
For Gompo$ting With Col/on iSfeti.
Trice f'io l??sh, with L'sunl Advance for
Time.
TIII8 article i? prepared under the ?ttp*r
tolendenee of Dr. ST. JULIKM RAV
ENET, expressly fur composting with cottor.
Seed.
T. win Introduced l?y litis Company two
years ago. an I its itae lina 'ully aiteated its
value. 200 to 2*0 pounds of tliia article
per acre, properly composted with the
eame welch' of cotton reed, furnishes the
planter with a FERTILIZER, of the highest
excellence at the smal eat coat. A compost
jnepsred with tIris article, aa hy primed
<iireelion? fiirniehed, contains all the etcorients
of fertility that can enter Into s
lir*t-cl*es FERTILIZER, while lis economy
.must commend ita liberal use to planteis
For supplies and printed directions for
compelling iippiv to
J. 1%. ItoJ>*on,
AGFNT PACIFIC GUAM) COMPANY,
No. 68 Kaat B >y and No*. 1 and 2 Aliunde
Wharf, Charleston, 8 C.
JNO. 8. UEIC8K A CO, General Amenta.
Not 29 80 3m
W '
roMBMiojC powerful iavlgqratit'g
Tbeee Bitter# M? poeiilvely invaluable in
BHWWWmMW'afrm
* They purify the tjtima, and wul cure
Remittent and Intermittent Revere,
and are a preventive of Cbille and Fever.
All yield to their powerful cC.oecy.
Am ? antidote to change of Wetar and Diet,
to the waited frame, and eotrcet all
Will eave day# of eaibring to the tick, and
The frond Panacea for all the ilia of life.
Tie stiuiart X'ra c,inmt.iTTaae^SX """""
rn TonnfevOM, ICanie^^KACTICL
Sm Single, then Bitter* am OB^V
S xneene of aavine Ufa.
#> fi-f * ?
Jan 3, 1ST3 33 I j
R0UKI1M
TO, 8HQB8, AG. "
5ioN, & co. -1
ig Full Supplies of Fresli FAMng
in part of:.
id Brown SUGARS
COFFEE . _
nd Breakfast TEA
JP of various qualities
rrela and sacks ' ^ < '
and Sliced OYSTERS - - a
Worcestershire SAUCE
DA. Table SATjT
CINNAMON, CLOVES
JELLIES, PRESERVES | *
SO, ? i i fc
CANDIES - ?
8 fc
;>king and Chewing TOBACCO tl
es, Razors, Seise ore v<
pes, Steel Pens, fWcils, Ink, ?fcc. hi
STOCK OF P"
MOCKERY AND 5
. ( ; I - ) i ' ~\ ? % > tfi
WARE. J
, ASSORTMENT OF
tin wiiis scops,I
. . ' tl
vr:s ArP &
7 tc
DES
01
o of the HOUSEHOLD and the in
n an Advertisement. w
XAMINE THE STOCK. ft
SSOK & CO. 5
20 tf of
?? ^
. . GREAT . . * ft
AT
B. M. Winstock's. 1"
ai
CJ
OT^fjliE undersigned lias just re- ^
igk; turned from New York with .
a full and .
WELL SELECTED
fffHi
OF r\
FALL '
AND O
WINTER
GOODS:
CONSISTING IN PART OF !'
FULL LIJYES n
at
OF Y
runes' urcss uootis. e<
Domestics. r<
Ladies1 and Gents1 Shawls. Ii
44 44 44 Hosiery and Gloves, n
44 41 44 Shoes. si
Gents1 and Boys1 Boots. e
41 Clothing and Furnishing tl
Goods. li
Ladies1 Gents! and Boys1 Ilats. t?
Domestic Groceries. c
Crockery and Glassware. 44
Trunks, Valises and Carpetbags. 44
And a great many articles too h
numerous to meution, all of which 1
I sell at b
Lowest Prices for Cash.
Call and examine for ^
your self, and yon will all ac- t)
knowledge that you can get great j,
bargains at v
B. M. WINSTOCKS.
At roell known Store a* Carre c
Old Stand.
Oct * - 42 If g
joTin c. seegers ;
Ml
MANUFACTURER, ?
WHOLESALE and RETAIL li
IAquor Dealer, ?
LAGER IE IB BREWER W. I
COLUMBIA, 8. C. ft
Oet 18 *4 If ?
, ii
Vacscinatiow parties are the
rage oot Wrtt in these small pox a
times, and sentimental lovers de t
light to recieve the virus from a
| toeir sweetheart arm. J t
f
ttoBsoBirnoH Two Dollate per ntwi< I
Amwiiman inoerted at tbo rmUi of
o dollar par oqaare of two I re Mlmoa Itaoa
ilr oUet typo) or Iom tor tbo trot Inoertloa, \
ty eeata each for tbo eoeoad and third tamer* ;
do, and twenty-dee eonta for aabaorjoont .
mrtiono. Yearly oontraoto will bo maae. >
All adeertieemente moot bar# tbo aambor I
U.MrtioDO marked on them, or tboy will bo
lerted till ordered oet, pad charged for. '
Unleaa ordered otberwioe, AdrertloemenU |
It invariably be " dUplayed."
Obituary no|lceo, bad all mattora inuring to (
the benefit of any one, are regarded ao j
Irertiaementa. |
REMINISCENCES- f
PUBLIC MEN. j
DT EX GOVERNOR B. F. PER BY. \
<
[continued from last wskk.} '
1
ANDREW V BUTLER. !
I know Jndge Bntler intimately 1
>r many years; and had a very 1
rong friendship and high regard (
r him. When he was elected to 8
le United States Senate, I took a 1
ery active part in the canvass for 1
im. The contest between him *
ud Governor Hammond was a J
ery close one. In exerting mv
ifhience as a member of the Leg* 1
latere to secure his election, 1 j
'as actuated by various motives.
Iy personal friendship for the
udge was perhaps the first and
le strongest. I thought he had
dents which wonld distinguish
itn in the Senate, and that he
onld there do great honor to
in Sitntn T Knrl ?!.?. ~1 ?
v w?u v. jl unvt um ^rcmrai CUUdence
in liia patriotism and in- 1
;grity, and I did not think his '
mnners, habits, learning or tal
its. suited to the Bench. lie was ;
.neti?ons and sonr on the Bench, '
itln.uit .knowing it. He was not '
very learned or profound law- J
jr. In many ca?cs where his
idgment w?8 at fault, lie was in- 1
ined to throw tho responsibility 1
'deciding the case on the jury.? j
e was so impatient in tlu# trial of
case, and so loud of cutting his 1
it and making sport of ever)- ^
ing that occurred, that a lii\^ye." f
It pleasant in, trying before '
in a long and cnftipluutsd- caxO- p
Judge Butler was a man of high
tollect and noble nature, just and f
tunable. He was cordial and 1
fectionate in; his disposition, but 0
(ccssively fond ot telling anec
ites and making sport of his best *
iends. lie loved hmwor and a
it dearly. In debates, when ex 1
ted, he was eloquent At other 1
mes, when not warmed by the a
bject, or inspired by the occa- J
on, he was dull and awkward.-?
i speaking, he was fond of makg
classical allusions, and referng,
for illustration, to the histo- 1
es of Rome and Greece, which *
3 had stndled well. '
Judge Butler was the son of *
en. William Butler, a gallant of- *
jer of the Revolutionary army, 1
id afterwards a member of Conress
for many years. lie was
nally beaten for Congress by }
ohn C. Calhoun. Judge Butler *
raduatcd at the South Carolina 1
bllege, and, after reading lawv
as admitted to the Bar. lie used '
> tell an amusing story of his goig
ho Orangeburg to establish i
imsclf as a lawyer, immediately ]
fter his admission to the Bar.? 1
Whilst at the hotel, he told the I
jrvant who was attending to his ]
Mm, to bring something to make t
is fire burn. In a short time the \
ei-ro hoy returned with several \
mal', pieces of plank, which look- <
d ? cry suspicious at d Strang to <
lie Judge. lie enquired ot the ^
by where he had got this kindling i
jr the fire. With perfect inno- I
ence and frankness he replied: <
Out here at the graveyard."?
What!" said the Judge, ' r??b- i
ling the dcAd to kindle a fire ?? I
ako every one of those pieces <
ack, you rascal, and place them i
rhereyon got them !" They were I
ittle liieCM (if nlntilr uiln/tli Im/t
ecu put ii|> at (lie bend and foot I
f graves. The Judge concluded I
t was no place tor him to settle, i
I'liere they had so little reverence <
,nd respect for their dead. He l
etnrued to Edgefield, and there i
ommenced his professional career, i
He was employed in a esse of <
Under for the defence. This was <
us first case. The defendant came
o him and told him that the plain* ;
iff was a mean fellow, and a great
ascal, and he wanted him severey
handled in the argument. The l
udge 6aid lie accordingly exhaustd
all his a of abuse on tlie
daintiff, and had no doubt that he
lad increased the verdict against :1
lis client a thousaad dollars bv his i
n war rat i table abase; butsomnch i
leased was the defendant with his i
peech, that he took the Jndpe to i
, jeweller's shop and made him a
. present of a gold watch M a fee
n the case.
In tlie Legislature, the Judge
poke very often without preparaion,
and, on one occasion, waft not
iltogether accurate in his quotaion
of one of the Ten Command
Bents. Thereupon, old Smb. Dickon,:
? member from Pendleton, 6
rbo wu a great wag, and always
Ironk, undertook to correct him in
>is quotation, and said as hisyoung p
riend did not seem to bo fpmiliar f
with the Commandments, lie would ?
epeat thorn for bis benefit. The c
galleries were filled with ladies.? C
The old member went on repeating
hera, with great emphasis and a
ong pauses, till he eame lb the 0
Seventh; after repeating it, he t
(topped, and remarked that he c
toped bis vonng friend would nev? 0
;r forget that one. t
In repartee, the Judge was always
happy and severe. On < ne 1*
tension, in the trial of a case at ?
Anderson, Peter VanDiver, a *
iroung lawyer, said to the Jndfge t
hat ne differed with him in opinon
as to the admissibility of the \
proposed testimony. The Judge ?
epiied, that might be, but that his 8
>pinion in the ruling wag worth r
lomething, and Mr. Vandiver's
vaa not. I witneaaed a passage at t
urna, once, between the Judge, d
vho lived at Edgefield, and the 1
Ion. A. Burt, who resided at Ab- ?
jeville, in reference to the com- n
>arative morals and temperance of a
he two districts. The Jndge Baid \
le had seen more drnnkenness at Q
he last Court at Abbeville than he >
aver saw at Edgefield. "Bncthere f,
ivas this difference," said Mr. Burt, ?
* at Edgefield yon see gentlemen J
Irunk, which yon never see at p
\bbeville." The Judge replied c
hat he did not know there were e
iny gentlemen at Abbeville to get v
irnnk. n
In a very short time after Judge
Butler took his seat in the United t
States Senate, he gave that body a f
specimen of his wit and humor, \
it the expense of a Senator from L
Tennessee, which convulsed the 0
gravity and dignity of the Senators p
rery rnnch. The member had
nade some assaults on Mr. Cal c
lonn, and the Jndge replied with c
i comparison ol the Senator most
in pri mely ridiculous, but which I t
:annot now undertake to repeat.? f
The Judge very soon took a high
position in the Senate, as a public f
ipeuker^and was greatly esteemed 0
,y likfcompeers in that body, then (
]-|lia^ous for its talent, elooueriCO *
infant* 04LI
The soeia? qualities of.Judge r
Butter were very' extraordinary,
md as a boon companion, be could t
tot be surpassed. He a.^ay8 kept r
he company merry and amused J
it. his wit and hutnor, pleasan' ?to- (
ies and laughable anecdotes. h*r \\
iad a great many warm, personal a
Viends, who alwaya supported
1 itil. llinlioll mill' Li!w? -
?T r.. ? ?? n
lolitics. He was a Whip, when j,
sleeted to the Senate by a Legisla- ri
lire entirely Democratic. Judge j
Sutler, though aNullificr in 1832, jt
raa opposed to secession in 1850, ^
ind took the stamp in favor of coloration,
which was, in fact, a n
Jnion party in disguise, for there 6J
vas no hope of tne other States
^operating at that time in any r
movement against, the Union. t
[CONTINUED NEXT WEEK.] f
' k
Sale ofthk Marquis of W ater- n
idrd's Estates in Ireland.?The h
Marquis of Waterford's estates in
[reland were recently sold for $1,- ?
>00,000. They were divided into n
L21 lots, and the remarkable fen- t!
ore of the sale was that the lots c
.vere bought by tenants, some of n
a bom paid at the rate of fifty, otlijrs
forty, and none less than thirty n
rears time. The great curse of
Ireland, and the most fruitful \
source of oppression and misrule, *
has always been that the tillers of
the soil were not the holders of it. c
Vast estates have been handed ?
down from generation to genera- 6
ti<?n of the gentry?land that, subdivided,
might have been success- 1
fully cultivated, has been allowed f
to run to waste, or made into parks f
and hunting grounds for too aris- *
tocracy?and cruel and impudent n
hirelings, acting as stewards for t
absent proprietors, have bitterly t
oppressed the tenants. In an Irish
town the traveler passes through
itreets filled with the evidences of
the most abject poverty to some
one, or two, or three massive and
costly residences of the gentry, 0
walled in and set apart from the 1
desolation and misery every where
present. It tho change seemingly
inaugurated by the disposition of ?
the vast estates of the Marquis of 1
W arert'ord can be carried on to its <
legitimate completion, the event i
will prove that the dawn of a bet- *
ter day has arisen upon Ireland, t
and Fenianism, Agrarian ism, Co;n t
Diunistn, and all the other "isms"
that have their birth in oppression 1
and their ending in blood, will pass e
natnrallv K- ????? ?' ?- -
'?"J " " % VJ I VBOVM Ul ItUVir I
very Heedlessness. (
Hint to mothers?treat your J
baby kindly, but uot cordial ly. j
A Detroit ladv visited a me I
nagerie aud asked to be shown a <
Cundurango. i
i~.?? .... . . ?
The living; lea. of Aarou Bur- .
"ometking New about the Private
Life ot the Great Conspirator. >
Ii ie known bj bnt comparativer
few peraons that a eon of Col.
larr, the archconepirator, around
rbom ding* aromatic and traari
rl bUtorj, U r citizen of Miami
Josnty.
If we Lave not a Bourbon
rnoog us, we have the offspring
f a roan who for lour years held
he second highest office in the gift
i the American people, the slayer
f Hamlton, ana who at tern pod
he dismemberment of the Union.
I would not credit the fact until
ed into the presence of the con*
pirator's son, whose head is
treaked with silver bairs, ripe for
be tptnb.
The old gentlemaif? who wears
lis mother's name, passing the deline
of life on a farm won by the
west of hie brow, is one of our
ooet peaceful citizens.
Ho furnishes, jet very relncRntly,
Incontcstible proof of bis
lescent?consisting of letters from
lurr to his mother prior and subequont
to her sons birth. His
aotlier was Miss Catharine ,
t that time (1800) a well known
Vashington belle, who fell l>eeath
the blandishments of the
fice-President- Rli? * ?
or ber beauty, refinement, and
rit, and after ber ruin, fled to
Philadelphia. Her sudden disappearance
from the gay capital
reated much talk, ana after that
vent she was dead to all tbe
rorld, save ber titled destroyer
nd bis son, our citizen.
Mr. saw bis father but
wice?once after bis acquittal beore
tbe Supreme Court of tbe'
Jnited States at Richmond when
iu was tried tor treason, tbe secind
and last time in tbe latter
>art of 1835, in New York.
On the latter occasion our old
itizen was recognized as tbe son
f tbe conspirator.
He .was then aged?bowed to
be eartli with tbe great weight of
ourscoro years and a broken
leart. Diseases also racked bis
ramc. Thirty years before, bis
iuly daughter bad sailed from 1
Charleston to meet him, but the
essel in which sbo embarked was 1
icver beard from, and tbe blow
learly crushed Burr's life.
"Sir," said tbe old man, " al
bough tho blood of Aaron Burr
uns through my veins, I detest it.
Ie conspired against the best.
Government on the face of God's
xitstool, nnd I am the offspring of
--f railor I"
" I tried to redeem my birtli by
gbting for my country in the
Torida war; but the odium
ankles in my heart, and little
oes the Government suspect that
; pays a pension to the son ol
laron Burr."
When I asked him whether I
tight publish these tacts, he
aid: "Yes. It will do me no
arm ; but for heaven's sake point
iot out my place of retirement to
he gazing world. Stigmatize my
at Iter as you please; but speak
;indly, I pray thee, of my gentle
nd erring mother, who is in
icaven waiting for her son."
441 am on the borders of threecore
and ten," he continued, with
aoistened eyes. 441 want to cross
lie river, where the stain of an
estry will never corrode a
amo."
I have not mentioned the old
nan's name.
Without his consent it never
lasses my lijis, or claims the scr'ice
of this pen.
But suffice ii to say that lie is
ften seen on the streets ot Piqua,
tnd more than once tilled a juror's
eat in the court.
He waits calmly for death, and,
! believe, has exacted a promise
i-om his grandson to bury the let
am Ai i.:- tin.? i.:_ A
?i vi hid miner vi mi mm. a
hort lime hence?yea, I feel it will
tot be long?a funeral cortege in
hit county will follow to the tomb
he son of Aaron Burr.
Then, peace to his ashes f
[Piqua (0.) Democrat.
Captain William Qibson, a sob
lie** during Wellington's Spanish
ainpaigns, and a veteran of Waerloo,
died in Illinois the other
lay, in his ninety fourth year.
A San Francisco dispatch, Jan
tary 3, says that Mrs. Laura D.
''air, the convicted murderess,
lied in prison in that city, on Sat
irday, December 30. Mrs. Fair
vas a woman of great personal at
ractions and strength of characer,
and was finely educated.
The Keowee Courier says:?
There were a large number of perions
present Saleeday. uFort Hill.**
he home ot the late II*>n. John C.
Calhoun, was bid off by Col. Clemion
at $15,000. Seven hundred
teres of " Keowee," home ol the
ate Col. James E. Calhoun, was
>onght for over $13,000. A large
quantity of laud of less value was
km a at ratuer lower rates tlian usual.
' Sksteh of lasMfiik, Jr.
'i
James Fisk, JrM wfs bom at
Bennington, Vermont, in 1888, ~
and began bis business lite as an 61
attendant of Van Ambnrgh's me- **
nagerie. ' His tatber was a ped- c
dler, driving one of those capaci- e
ous wagons still so common in the f
rural districts of New England, '!
stored with calicoes, tinware, ?
laces, trinkets and household nten* j1
sils, tX which the farmers' wives
and daughters do the most of tbeir *
shopping. From Bennington be a
removed to Brattleboro*, where e
James obtained all the little eda- *'
cation be ever got, at the district *
school, it was nothing more than
a moderate acquaintance with the ''
alphabet and the copybook. He
never mastered the art of spelling, 0
and to the end of his lite bad a T
comical contempt for grammar.?
The elder Fisk had the same com- J!
mercial instincts and a little of the
same taste tor variety in his enter r
prises which afterward distin- 0
guished the son. He built an inn, u
an in default of a satisfactory ten- 0
ant used often to manage it him- !
self; the son at such times was
employed as waiter. But his nm- '
biticn was to be a peddler/ Ife
began by traveling with his fath- .
er. Pretty $oon lie was entrusted II
with a Separate wagon, fcnd no ,
ended by buying out the business,
and taking his worthy sire as bis c
hired man to drive one of the ve- ''
hicles. With the brightest wag
ons, the showiest horses, and the ?
most glittering harness, in the
State, and with an abundance of r
that ready wit and good-natured a
impudence for which ho afterward f
becamo famous, he prospered bo ^
fast that he was soon one of the
nrinninol 1 '
!> inva^ai JUUUVIO III I cniKUIl.
The Boston firm of Jordon, (
Marsh ?fc Co. we* c glad to receive
him ns a partner. Subsequently,
in 1853, tboy bought ont hw inter- f
est in the firm, and he came to ,
New York, where he was employ- t
ed by Daniel Drew to negotiate ^
I the sale of the Stoi.ington fine of t
steamers. Under the patronage
of Mr. Drew he went into Wall t
street speculations with varied t
success, and furmed in 18Ci> the :
stock broking firm of Fisk ?fc Bel- .
den. In 1887 he entered into the
directory of the Erie Railway e
Company with Jay Oould, and his
career almost ever since has been, 1
perhaps, the most notorious in the i
United States. The Yanderbilt c
and Belmont Erie litigations, the
immense and daring gold conspiracy
of 1SC9, the bold push to (
gain possession of the Albany and i
Susqtiel anna railroad, which nl- ?
most involved the State in civil
war, the contest with the English
stockholders of the Erie railway, .
J the prolouge of which is just
drawing to a close by the restoration
of the seized English stock?
all arc familiar, but all after the f
vast amount that has been talked j
and written about theiu in the ^
I courts, the legislatures and the
newspapers, still retain much of
the mysterious. T.ioy have fixed
the reputation of the chief actor, \
however, ns a man remarkable .
rather for daring enterprise than 1
for patriotism or philanthropy in
the ends at which the)' aimed, or
Bcruplonsness in the cboieo of
means to carry them out.
[ Baltimore Sun.
The Secret or Large Citors.?
An exchange says :
Plough deeply and at once,
plant good seca only and then cul*
, tivate well. Do no: be afraid of
frost. If it comes and bites down
a part, do not plough up, but save
what is left and replant only
where killed. Many a crop has
been ploughed up when four*
fifths of it would have come out
again. And if all be killed it will
not be labor lost to have planted,
as it will only make your ground
hotter for a srcond planting.?
Plant early and yon will, with
good cultivation, be sure of a
bountiful yield.
Reckift for Preventing* tub
I Hair Falling Off.?Onions must
be rubbed frequently on the part.
The stimulating powers of this
vegetable are of essential service
in restoring the tone of the skin,
and assistiug the capillary vessels
in sending forth new hair ; but it
is not infaUible. Should it succeed,
however, the growth of
these new hairs may be assisted
by the oil of myrtle berries, the
repute of which, perhaps, is
(greater tnan its real efficiency.? :
These applications are cheap and (
harmless, even where they do no
good; a character which cannot
be said of the numerous qnack |
remedies that meet the eye in ,
i every direction. j
Tub Methnen (Mass.) Cotton 1
Mill employs 650 hands, rnr.s 11, '
000 epincjlea, and 314 looms, and t
produces 10,000 yards of cloth per 1
day. *
U .. 111 "III, I "> !>
, ; ,y >Pl : / : , .
Shrews, or diasjipointad woman A
-call tbem what jou like?genrally,
sooner er later, find litemslves
alone in the-world. Tbeir
bildren bare gome from -tbem besnee
tbey found it impossible to
amain and li???? m*?* > a
i long enotigh to remain with 5'
^appointed woman?too long, In
ict, tf joa do not with to boar a
irribly lohg catalogue of trials
nd troubles. But she will be
mi able, so tar as ?ou are concernd,
for that time, because yon poe988
the charm of noveltv. After
week, take care.. Tueir true
'iends and relatives have become
treated, through the hard and
iter thing* which have been said
f them, and the angry altercations
rhich have taken place. All, in
act, who properly know them,
void them, for their society is
langerooa. Thus, tbey have to
ely on chance acquaintances for
oinpanionship^ From morning
intii night they morbidly brood
iver their unhappy lot, and yet in
lotbing can they tee that they
tave done wrong. They have ig1lored
the principle of w give and
ake " in family disputes, and have
ipon all occasion* asserted their
ndependence and mastery. But
hey recognise no fault in that.?
fet they mourn the loss of kinIred
and friends, and long for ge
nai companionship. It cuts them
o the quick to see themselves
hunned by those whom down in
lie bottom of their, hearts they
eally love. Yet so completely has
t long-continued sense of disap-*
ointment and wrong operated.up*
>n their natures, that they are ntcrly
unable to regulate their conInct
so as to secure a return of
his lore. They must be cynical,
critical, quarrelsome, spitetul and
noody when they would rather be
otherwise. They are often well*
neaning at heart. Thoy can be
ruly generons, and if yon happen
o got them in the right one will
lo anything to oblige you. Bnt
he difficulty is to get"them in the
ight cne, for at different times
hey will be so different. They
ire their own worst enemies. It'"
s pitiful to see them standing thus
llone, and to think'that they will
ityer be tbotoqgbly happy on this
tide of the crave. Tt 1a /?nr?
ti , ? ? ?v' u k'""
ible when it is remembered what
hey might have become had their
ot been differently cast. Instead
>f thorns, they might have strewn
oees in onr path ; and instead of
mibitteriug their own lives and
titers*, might have cast the halowing
influences of love and con
entment around tliem. They deter
ve, then, more tender considcrition
than is generally extended
o them.?Liberal Jievieto.
+ ? a
The Dispute with Russia? Exjitfment
over prince GoRTBCHAioff's
Note.?A special dispatch
o the New York Evening Post
Yom Washington, nndcr a late
late, savs :
Nothing has lately led to so much
comment in diplomatic circles as
Prince GortschakofTs letter to Minster
Curtin, relative to the treatnent
of Minister Catecazy by the
Jnited States Government.
The document has made a deciled
sensation, inasmuch as it is
opposed to have the sanction ot
l.e Czar, and foreshadows that
!dr. Catecazy is to be sustained by
lis own government.
The letter is regarded by liigh
ifbcers as a direct and o]>cn insult
o the President and Secretary ot
State, and as likely to lead to se
iUUO I'TOUIIB.
The country need not be surprised
if Mr. Curtin, our Minister
to Russia, is immediately ordered
to demand his passports, and the
Russian Charge d'Affaires here
mpplied with his, in order that he
may take his departure from the
United States. This would break
:>ff all diplomatic intercourse with
Russia, but such a step is said to
have been under contemplation
iiready by onr authorities.
It is maintained liore that onr
government acted with great forbearance
and leniency towards Mr.
Datecazy, and that instead of the
Russian Government being offendjd,
it ought to feel thankful that
>nr Government did not long ago
tend Mr. Catecazv his passports.
Princo GortschakofTs letter has
sxplained Mr. Catecnzy's objec:ionablc
conduct, and confirmed
what has long been suspected here
by our authorities, that he acted
in accordance with instractions
trow St. Petersburg, and not ot his
own volition.
Iloward, the nfgro who recently
raped a white girl near Rochester,
N. Y , and who came near being
lynched by the people there,
vas take* secretly to the court,
init
i'potvvu fxuij) ami TM Mn*>
enced to twenty yeara hard labor,
ind ie now in the Auburn penitou
iary.